Here's Why BTS Jin Stays Home Every Single Vacation Day

TXT's Beomgyu revealed the gaming sessions and practical wisdom behind Jin's famous off-day philosophy

|6 min read0
BTS Jin in a music video still — a thoughtful portrait of the artist known for his candid off-stage personality
BTS Jin in a music video still — a thoughtful portrait of the artist known for his candid off-stage personality

BTS and Tomorrow X Together share more than a record label — they apparently share a vacation philosophy, too. On the May 6 broadcast of MBC's variety show Radio Star, TXT's Beomgyu revealed that his close friendship with BTS's Jin has quietly shaped the way both artists spend their rare days off: mostly indoors, mostly gaming, and entirely by design.

The revelation came during Episode 964 of Radio Star, which aired May 6 and featured a guest lineup of actor Choi Daniel, former Sistar member Nam Gyuri, Bolbbalgan4 vocalist Ahn Ji-young, and TXT's Beomgyu. The episode quickly began trending online after Beomgyu opened up about his life off-camera — and the mentor-protégé friendship with Jin that has quietly defined his approach to celebrity downtime.

The Advice That Changed How Beomgyu Spends Time Off

Beomgyu described himself as "completely introverted," an identity he said was partly shaped by Jin's perspective. The BTS vocalist, whom Beomgyu looks up to as a senior in Korea's closely networked idol industry, had offered him a piece of advice that is simple on the surface but carries considerable weight when you understand the world these artists live in.

"Isn't it better to stay home and game than to go out and risk something happening?" Jin had told him. The logic is pragmatic — celebrities who venture out in public risk unwanted attention, misunderstandings, or the kind of incidents that can become tabloid fodder overnight in Korea's hyperconnected media environment. For an artist at Jin's level of recognition, a low-key trip to a coffee shop can end up photographed, speculated over, and dissected online before the cup is empty.

Beomgyu took the advice to heart. He told the Radio Star panel that when TXT receives a two-week vacation, most of his group members use the break to travel or catch up on experiences they've missed while on the road. Beomgyu stays in the dormitory. "Whenever we both have days off," he added, "I go to his place and we just play games all day." For two artists whose schedules are otherwise dictated down to the hour, a quiet afternoon of gaming apparently counts as a genuine luxury.

A Friendship Built Between Two World-Class Groups

The bond between Beomgyu and Jin reflects a broader dynamic between BTS and TXT that their respective fanbases — ARMY and MOA — have followed for years. Both groups are signed to HYBE's Big Hit Music label, meaning their members have trained in the same facilities, navigated the same company culture, and faced many of the same pressures on their way up.

BTS, who debuted in 2013, are more than a decade ahead of TXT — who debuted in 2019 — in career terms. For younger members like Beomgyu, the BTS members function as something between industry mentors and older brothers: people who have already lived through the arc of global stardom and can offer the kind of candid perspective that no management briefing could fully replicate.

Jin, in particular, has always occupied a distinctive place in BTS's public image. Known for his warmth, dry humor, and willingness to be genuinely candid about the less glamorous realities of idol life, he has remained one of the group's most relatable figures even as BTS's profile has grown to a scale that makes ordinary life logistically complicated. His friendship with Beomgyu — who shares Jin's self-deprecating humor and introverted tendencies — fits the pattern.

Why the Story Resonated With Fans

Radio Star hosts Kim Gu-ra and Yoo Se-yoon responded to Beomgyu's story with a blend of recognition and sympathy. "People in broadcasting say that going out means accidents," Kim Gu-ra remarked — a line that functions as both industry wisdom and a quiet acknowledgment of the constraints these artists navigate daily. Yoo Se-yoon called the situation "realistic but a bit sad," which drew knowing laughter from the panel.

Online, the fan response was warmer. ARMY and MOA communities flooded social media with reactions that ranged from affectionate to genuinely moved. Many fans noted that the glimpse into both artists' private lives — the shared gaming sessions, the dorm days, the straightforward philosophy about celebrity risk management — was exactly the kind of unguarded honesty that makes following these groups feel meaningful beyond the music itself.

There was also a layer of gentle irony that fans did not miss. Even as Beomgyu was describing Jin's preference for staying home during downtime, the BTS vocalist was midway through a world tour — performing for tens of thousands of fans across North America on consecutive nights, from Tampa to El Paso to Mexico City. The man who preaches staying in was, at that very moment, doing the opposite on the largest possible stage.

What This Reveals About Life at the Top of K-Pop

The Radio Star exchange touched on something fans don't often see laid out this plainly: the gap between the performing life and the private one. Idol culture in Korea places enormous demands on artists in terms of visibility, image management, and public-facing behavior — and as BTS and TXT have grown into genuinely global acts, the scrutiny has scaled accordingly.

For artists operating at that level of attention, home stops being simply a place to rest and becomes something closer to a necessary refuge — a space where they can exist without performance mode switched on, where the only audience is a close friend who happens to share their taste in video games.

Beomgyu's Radio Star appearance offered no scandals, no surprises, and no carefully managed talking points. What it gave instead was something rarer in the idol world: a small, honest window into what two of K-pop's biggest names actually do when the cameras are off. As it turns out, they game. And based on Beomgyu's tone when describing it, that's apparently one of the better parts of the job.

For fans of both groups, the moment also served as a quiet reminder of just how intertwined the BTS and TXT worlds have become. Both acts share the same label, the same training culture, and — as Beomgyu's visit makes clear — the same social circle. As TXT continues to build their own global footprint and BTS enters a new chapter following military service, the bond between the groups looks less like a corporate footnote and more like a genuine friendship that outlasted the trainee years. That kind of continuity, rarely spoken about openly, may be one of K-pop's most underrated stories.

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Park Chulwon
Park Chulwon

Entertainment Journalist · KEnterHub

Entertainment journalist focused on Korean music, film, and the global K-Wave. Reports on industry trends, celebrity profiles, and the intersection of Korean pop culture and international audiences.

K-PopK-DramaK-MovieKorean CelebritiesGlobal K-Wave

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